50 Would YOU like to try our Old-Fashioned VE NT Smoked Ham & Bacon? Our business was started 100 years ago by a man with d grcdt gift for smoking meats. We still use his origindl formuld. . - never hdvin found a WdY to inlplove it. . Harrington's Hdm dnd Bdcon moke leisurely over Corn Cobç dnd 111aple- wood. We don't USt' hIckory. ever hdve. Our way taste" so much better! EACH YEAR THOUSANDS VISIT . OUR 3 STORES IN VERMONT A \fD . OUR NEW STORE IN GREENWICH, CONN. We do hope you will come see u . In the meantime, if you'll let us, we'd . like to send you two things. Our FREE . CATALOG which tells you all about . our wonderful Old Fashioned Smoked . Hams, Bacon, Pheasant, Fresh Sdusdge, 1dple Syrup & Candy. Aged Chee t', and many other delicious tredsures. It's al Tn,ost as good as d visi t. Secondly, if you'll let u , we'd like to i send you ON APPROVAL our Hdr- rington' SAMPLES BOX! Here's whdt' l @ in it. A real Vermont Cob Smoked Hdnl, J weighing 6 lbs. and one lb. of OUI . ..... delicious Cob Smoked Bacon. WE CAN'T WAIT FOR YOU TO TRY THEM! We have to charge $12.95 for f' the Sample"- Box (a special one-to-d- I customer introductory price), and we . aren't d bit worried about your coming . back for more! Pledse send us the cou- i -- . pon below. We ship b) return mail. Y OUI . complete sdtisfaction is gUdrdnteed, of @ course, or full refund w-ahout a quibble ' HARBlN!J ToNS Ð 5001-4 Main Street Richmond, Vermont 05477 Please send . D The Harrington\ SAlVIPLES BOX of Ham and Bdcon as described dbove Enclosed is $12.95 If it's dlJ you say it is, we'll probdbly ordel more of your products. - Master ä Charge No GS . EXpiration Date Master Charge Interbank No ITIIJ o Your FREE CATALOG o Information on your Business Gifting Program. Name ddress Zip great inventions, starting from the sll1allest beginnings, and to Judge that wonderful arts lie hidden behind trivIal and childish things is not for ordinary mortals: these are concepts and ideas for superhuman souls." The defiance and the human asser- tion contained in the origin of scientific reason help to explain whv its progress has been companioned b} mysticisI11- brother and enemy, reflection and shadow. M vstIcisI11 is a belief in realities that are bevond the reach of Intellect or of normal perceptIon but are acces- sible to the individual through a process of intuition, COI11I11union, or heightened experience. Mysticism and scientific reason not only have comI11on origins but, in their purest form, contain dan- gerous possibilities, which hdve COI11e to their most devastating realization in our own tÍI11e. The ideological background of that devastatIon was analyzed b, the Nohellaureate Werner Heisenberg, who was the director of Hitler's urani- tun project, with what would h t ve been irony equal to the best of Swift or 13eckett if he had not been sincere. He records his remarks to a scientific (0]- le lgue as the two men eI11e rged from an air-raid shelter at the end of an i\llied bombing attack and began the long walk from Berlin's Potsddmer Plat? to suburban Dahlem: "Perhaps we Germans, of all people, have a special part to play in this area l sci- ence] precisely because the absolute exerts so strange a fascination on us. . . . If GerI11any has I11ade scientific or ar- tistic contrihutions that have changed the wOlld-we have only to think of Hegel and Marx, of Planck and Ein- stein, of Beethoven and Schubert- then it was thanks to this love of the clbsolute, thanks to the pursuit of prin- ciples to their ultimate consequences." Suddenly, Heisenberg's reflections were interrupted, because "as I was speak- - ing, m) right shoe had caught fire ågain, and it took me quite SOI11e tÍt11e to scrdpe off dll the phospnorus." One of the creators of I110dern physics, the _ truth at his feet, love of the absolute sputtering and smoking onl) a sole's wid th frarn his own body. '[he increasing and increasingly jus- . tified apprehension that scientific reason had destroyed forILS of order which it could not replace opened new frontiers for 111) sticisrn. SorTIe forms of seculal . 111) sticiSIl1 clre reldtively benign-hu- Il1clnis111 of tll si7es and shapes, organic gal dening, Reverence for Life. But other [11clnifestations of secular m) sti- cisIl1 contain unparalleled possibilities for repression and control. Earlier lead- ers-popes, priests, and kings-had JANUARY 2. I, I 9 7 -+ EAST SIDE HOUSE SETTLEMENT WINTER . es sao January 18 thru 27 The twentieth annual exhibition and sale of antiques from the collections of distinguished dealers Seventh Regiment Armory Park Avenue at 67th Street New York, N.Y. Monday Saturday noon- 9 p.rn Sundays 1-6 p.m. Closing Sunday, Jan. 27 at 6 p.m. Por the benefit of Basi SUe House Settlement \ \ .",. t r.r þ .,.... . r, V " : 1\ ' . ... \. . _ ,,\ . · · ",. 1Ç IWtreat ad :. wit!t " J '.:- .iIl. St y le 1[ - .f/ Three bedroom home ... surrounded by 10 acres of magnificent woods. Spring fed pond and stream. Summer house guest house and aviary. Contemporary - f furnishings included. Located in . White Cloud, Mich $98,500 '.. - 1k · IbIssell lQaaseIls 0 . ES I Galleíy ot" HODtes HOLLAND, MICHIGAN 616-392-6971 I " 1 The Ideal Family Resort . , , :J ' "' . c r. - &IJ 11:1: ""'-A"-O RE>>CH '> BEACH COTT AGES Miles of white sand beach, all water sports, tennis (courts lighted for night play), GOLF (by card) at our IS-hole championship course, superb cUisine, beautiful accom- modations. Reserve today! Pan Am flies to Rock Sound daily from Miami & New York. See your Travel Agent or phone our representatives LEONARD HICKS ORGANIZATION NEW YORK 765-5800 ELEUTHERA BAHAMAS ... '"